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The Southerners. | Continued From hrd Pug-*. 1 ry of tin? ebbing of the mighty tiile of war at tiettysburg was received, when the last hope of the south went down as Pickett's column reeled back from Cemetery Kidgc. leaving the heroic Armistcad's dea l hudy to mark high water on tlte hills, as if in accordance with his own resolution the judge folded his hands across his breast and became a citizen of another country, that is, let us hope, a heavenly one. And Heverl.v Annan, a boy of sixteen. home from the Virginia Military institute, overruling his sister's protests. laid enlisted in the artillery and gone down to Fort Morgan with the First Alabama battery, where Colonel Peyton, now a brigadier general, cutumatitled all the defenses of the hay. "What!" cried the hoy when she expostulated with him and In sought him. "The south i: 1 extremity, lighting for every tiling that men hold dear, and no Annan in the field! Yes. yes. 1 know 1 ~ p] I ! ill J ) j i: ^ ^ "Yes, yes, / harm; I ma tlm lm>l u) h * Sintci' Ma I'll." a 111 tlio last of tliom, Sister Mary. ( : cept you and little Temjio. the last ? !' the line; yet. if it must end, can it end iu n bettor way:"' And so, laughing, hot like, beneath his tears, lie had torn himself from her n id was gone. Only Toniiio remained. Tempo grown taller and larger and wiser, but Tempo nnieli the same, not asking now if the soldiers wore going to shoot the "Nunltod State.-." The departure of troops from the city had \ become such an ordinary occur, nee ^ now as to awaken little attention. Willis JVyton. perhaps inliuetieed by his brotiier's profession. had resigned from the battery and had gone into the ; Confederate navy, where ho had alreatly enjoyed a brillian, career on the Sunder. lie was now 011 duty with other officers at Selma, tip t'ae state, where was building a great war vessel, destined to ?arn for it- If a heroic name In future naval history. Mrs. l'eyton and 1'ink liv?,l at Annandale l ow. The adiliti nal < \p use of keepins up two estahlishtncnts was sreat la tins, straightened days. Mary Annan. alone in the yr.at In use, craved the companionship of the , ld.-r woman whose daughter wa h r dean s; friend. outwardly thinss remained nnieh as th. \ had be, n before the war began. Tlie bree/.e still sffi pt across the lay laden wi;!i the heavy summer fragrance of the semitl" pie ! ! >se;ns. the mockins I rds still sang in the live oaks, but within everything v. .s different. Mobile bad not \>t sulVerid for the neo ssaries of life, but luxuries bad Ions sir.ee gone. : i la nee, it had heen diilcult, nay, imp --'d ie. for Mary Am.an to purchase 1 lack roods for mourning wear when her father died. There was such a demand for that all over the south and the north, too. for that matter that had it not l.eon for the resources of wardr lies of the past alio would have been witli? out It. These growing privations f? II harfb e<t again upon the women, itut tl-?*y i .me ;.n ij .: :uur. uei-epii*ii me ssir.::1 ;->:i without repining, rejoierd Hint they could contribute that little to the c: use thc.v loved. CII ATT Kit XXI. MARY ANNAN I.EARNS THE TIM TIT. rOVnY ANNAN* l^id changed I iV| J greatly in this period. WithPiCsrf out surrender i ng a shade conlV &JJ viet'on. will re .'he h:ul de: etl. she admired; where she hod I.::' a, she respected; whero she had f. 'Klit she had forget ten, she n mei il>oi. d; whera she renn inhered, she I iv 1! Yes. she was slill devoted to the south and would cheerfully have died for it. She hud many a time longed t! it she were a man to draw a sword or i arry a musket in defense of her c mtry. She would not have hesitated a ! oniont between love and duty, she II ?eght. but slio had come to realize th; while duty may restrain, it is. alter all, lovo that makes tho supreme api enl. And the outwaril and visible >' 'i>o whieh that supreme appeal took i re her heart was not that of J)ari .iv, to who;n she was hetrotln?l, hut of Peyton, v. hoin she had rejee'.ed. ?>h lived him! In spite of her pride, in rp'ie of her cause, i:: spite of her will, i.i : pite of c er.vthi:iu, she loved him.' No o:ie in Mobile had heard fn ; 1 I'.e.yd I'eytfr.t siliee that day lie dropp I < t of tie ir existence years I "fore. Put I fin had I ived him with : lowinjf Inte:i f 'ty ever rinee. 'J'o he sure, ,he had ?*npraged h i self to l?arro\v. Sir* In I per 6Uadcd herself in his presence that she coulil do it with safety, she had tried to blind herself to the truth, and phe had clung to that engagement with desperate tenacity during the intervening years. Ilut her eyes were opened, and she realized ail too soon that the tie binding her to Dnrrow was merely one of honor and respect. It was a pity that this was so, for Harrow had shown himself most admirable in the situations in which he had been placed, lie had developed grandly. From major of ids regiment he had risen to the command of an Alabama brigade, and ia all the des- ) | perate lighting of the Army of North; era Virginia he had borne a splendid and heroic part. The state rang with ' praise of the young paladin. Alabama was proud of him; Mobile rejoiced to ! claim him. There -was something quixotic yet i admirable about the young man's posi1 tion on the subject of home coming. Mary Annan had promised herself to him when tin* war was over and he ' could come lining a victor, and 'until that time arrived he had promised to let her alone, lie would do It. lie would keep that promise if it broke his heart. Like Uriah of old, he believed ; Ids place to be in the battle line. Frequent letters had come to her from him as the exigencies of his I service permitted. Quaint, charming | letters they were, too, manly, modest, ; humorous In a way, through them run- 1 ning the clash of arms, the echo of ! moving squadrons, the roar of battle, and all of them carrying to her the , deep and mighty current of love and consecration of his great, devoted ; heart. She was the master theme in ; all the voices the crowded years played { in his soul. Without her he was notli- | i ing, one of thousands as brave and ! strong as he. With her he was a hero, j , VL ,,..,1 ...a Mi.u ivq.1 I her to her engnmoment. I Io bail scarcely gone before she wished it broken. Harrow wns no less admirable than i I'eyton. True, he had not been com! polled to make any such sacrillee as : the other had, but he had done what I lie conceived to lie his duty with a j i direct simplicity that was admirable. But what of all this? It was notli- ' in?:. If 1 arrow had been dowered | i with every faculty, possessed of every I j virtue, and if Peyton had none of i these, she would have loved him Just the same, lley passion had passed far ; beyond the calmly reasoiling or reasonable stage. It took note only of facts, or, rather, of the one sublime fact that she loved him. Harrow's appeal had been most powerful to the physical side of her nature, and that side was growing more and more in abeyance in her developing life. If she could have seen him, it might have been different. She might lave -<; alized the change in him. Yet she was not ignorant of what he j had done for and through her, how he had developed in love and war. And she was fearful what the consequences might be to him and, if he were of value, to the south if she should take away front him the stimulus of hope. Yet she had at last reached the point where she felt compelled to do so. As he loved her more he expected more from her; as she loved Peyton more. olhj i/anuw iirsis aiiu 11? r heart hail turned absolutely'to reyton. Saving her iluty to the south, she was his. llis absence, the impossibility of their meeting, all conspired to produce the utter abandonment with which she gave way to her passion. She could not sit a single moment in the solitude of her chamber without thinking of him. Site realized that if he over stood again before lier with ids arms stretched out to her no power on earth should keep them apart?unless her duty to the south intervened. And even that duly would have to be overwhelming in its appeal to stay her movement toward hint. Her being went out to him more strongly when she learned inadvertent- . ly that he was an olilcer 0:1 one of the | ships blockading the month of the bay , opp< ite Fort Morgan. 1-Y.te had as yet j given bim little opportunity for distinction; lie was <4111.v a lieutenant, tlie J wateli olilcer of a frigate. The overpowering of a great passion such as poets have dn allied of, such j as historians have written of, such as, given wider fields, have moved the world, was upon her. The thought of reyton obsessed her. and her heart I cried out to bim with every beating, j She trembled even at the most secret thought of bis name. She was iiovi r so happy as when Mrs. I'eyton, long since having disregarded her husband's 1 injunctions, talked of bim. The ehh r woman marked the reveln1 lion at d wondered, with a painful pity j for poor Harrow and a mighty yearn- j ; ing for her eldest son, how it would I ail end. The grim old father, too. down 1 ; on the ramparts of Fort Morgan, j | wah In ii the licet tossing tif and fro on ! ' the long swells of the gulf of Mexico j i and longed for a sight of the boy he | ; had so loved. In Mary Annan's waking hours she | was afraid, afraid 1o think liow inueli 1 ! slie lov? d ISoyd Peyton. In tlio long nights she dreamed of liiin. She was I his, that was all. Whether he claimed I her or no, whether he knew it or not, | vlte was liis. Ah. loving CJoil, how she | prayed for him in every hour of her ; { life! The south and lie mingled in her | petitions, and only that (Joil who can ( | read the holy mystery of a loving woi man's heart knew which came first. Her feelings grew so strong at last that she came to the conclusion that she must tell I>arrow. If it killed him, lie must know, livery letter she re| eeived in its trusting devotion impressed upon her that honor demanded that lie should he told the truth, She i did not love hint. She never could ^ love him. Marriage with him would he no sacrament, hut a acrilege. She j honored him, she esteemed him. She would have given worlds to Imvc fell differently. She had honestly tried to i love him hut her heart had at last out Ion pod constraint. That was the naked truth. She could not permit herself to deceive hitu longer, so at last she poured out her heart to Iiim in one long broken appeal, telling him the whole truth, shaming herself, scorning herself, but asking her freedom. In agony she penned the letter. There was no doubt In her mind as to the sincerity of narrow's passiou for her. She looked into her own heart miu saw what bo would sudor, and she suffered for and with liiui. The penalty and the reward of a great passion are lu sympathy it begets with Hie suffering that always follows knowledge of the heart. She was dreadfully uithappy. lint for ; Boyd Peyton she would have died. The fateful letter had been sent to Darrow about the tnli^llc of September by tlie band of (Hamilton Pleasants, lieutenant colonel now, if you please, commanding the old Alabama regiment. lie had come back to recover from an attack of typhoid fever after Ccttysburg, and he had become betrothed to F(iik Peyton at the time. The news had come that I.ongstrcet's corprfi was hurrjTbg from Virginia to re-enforee Bragg's army, then facing Rosecrnus and the i^rmy of the Cumberland on the nittuutains around Chattanooga. Though he was scarcely able to endure the fatigues and demands of active campaigning; Pleasants had hurried away to intercept his regiment and to take part in the effort which was to be made to hurl the Federal troops out of Tennessee. CHAPTER XXII. WITH HARROW'S BRIGADI'. ARLY in the afternoon of Sept. lit, 1SG3. the lirst of the long SjSn? troop trains clanked wearily into the station at Ringgold, (Ja. A young man in gray uniform, wearing the shoulder straps of a lieutenant colonel, stood upon the platform. an expression of eagerness and anxiety on ids thin, worn face as he gazed at the long line of ramshackly cars tilled with gray clad men. As the lirst soldier stepped from the train lie rushed impetuously up to him with outstretched arms, shouting: "Oil, Bob, Bob! 1 am so glad"? The handsome face of Brigadier General ltobcrt Harrow, commanding the Alabama brigade of Hood's division of Longstrcet's famous corps of the Army of Northern Virginia, broke into a broad smile as Lieutenant Colon tl Hamilton Pleasants recovered himself with an embarrassed laugh, came to attention, saluted in the most formal manner and remarked with military precision: "General, I report for duty, sir." "Glad to see you, Ilam," returned Harrow genially, shaking the other warmly by the hand.; "You ought not to he here, though. You are not well yet." , ?*. "Couldn't help ii^"\s/\jd Pleasants. "1 Just had to euiuo, I heard there was going to he lighting, ijnd I wanted to head the old reg'.riient once more." "Well, you get herein the nic'mi'f time. Your regiment'.'H on this section. Go and take e'r.hhiond and get the men out of the ears. They are In heavy marching order and are to move forward at once." "All. i.edyard." said the young gener: !. turning : > a stall' o.'Iicer. "you are to remain :;t the station and as fast : s the other rigmants of the brigade oine In direct ti.eir colonels to get the men In ii: as <;UicU as possible. I will rest the ri rAt <f the brigade over Caere i:i that lieid. Ah. here conies some one looking fcr US." be ad led. US another ? t a IT oLk tT ?*am; r'niiug dnwii the road til .1 furious gallop. baited abruptly?before li:m. dismounted uiitl salut?d. "(leno: al !tarrowV" "Yes. y'.r." *" I *i.1 Colonel Thompson of General I rivgg's staff." "(!!.:d to meet .vou. colonel." | ""haul; .vou: tho pirnsv.ro's mine," j said Thompson. "As soon ns your Irl| gnde i? ;'ss tu'drd. sir. you ore to | march up tii'-: root! to tho 1 oft toward | Ilirii's l.i-itljro. over Chiekauiauga | ci'i'i'i:. with nil speed. General Hood's I eonpiinionts and orders, sir." I "Very good>t sir. How far is It to the , r.rrnyV" "It's about ten miles, I reckon, and tiie tutu-mi hopes you can get tliere lids evening. 'I In re Ipis been heavy lighting all morning. You are needed." ! "We'll lie there." "It's a long inarch," said the colonol | dubiously. "That's all right; I've pot a brigade | ct foot cavalry here." laughed Harrow. | To an Continuko.] Narrow Kscnpo for One Man. ' ! importance of examining closely tie ! u! 1 on weapons was shown i:i i c i i which a hatchet having dotted Pin .1 : ! -1 !'u!r adherent to it v.e.s I'.r.i'ed evMowo against a p:is- > r.speeti A; i murder in a little count:y town. It was found under ids li d. This, willi other circumstantial evidence. bad turned public <'pinion i trougly against tie- prisoner, but when be hair was examined by a micro Ist who chained to be ill the court- I it .a it v;u found hot to be limunn. but 11 :11 of Kfi::ic ir-.lmul. This clrcnnv Mntav ImI to n mor.' complete slftinj; ? f tie t valence. ur.d tlie* licensed war. :;c<;r.Utcd. it turned or.t tlint he line I ill;(I a ?!<< : willi !!:? hatchet and line <'Son<!.v ll.riitvn t'.io weapon nude. ' c i?t 'I. So I Is life literally hung on i heir. MANAGER WANTED. We (U'firo to employ a trustworthy ladv or gentleman to manage our buMtievsin this count v arid adjoining teiritory O.ir house is well and favorably known. $-20 00 Straight Cash Salary and tdl F.xpenses paid each wrek by check direct 1 rom liead'tuartern ISxpense money artvanced; previous exjierlence unnecessary; losiliou permanent. A?Wees? Thomas .1. Coot-nit. Manager, 1040 Caxtoi, ^uildt.nt', th'cago, 111. 12-7t. AVIicr* Lite Is Strenaom. lieIV ill the northwest one encounters the living representation of the strenuous life. Here men work together in a way unknown anywhere else. The eust is insular, every man for himself. The . northwest. Indeed the whole west, has learned the value of co-operation and community interest. Migrating to a , new country, with difficulties and dangers on every hand, the people havo been forced to combine and stand with solid front to the world. As a result innumerable organizations have sprung up having for their purpose the advancement of some community interest.?liny Stannnrd Baker in Century. No Cnuiv For Alarm. "All." sighed Mr. Ilcupeek. "it's a pity the way most great men's sons turn out. It's only in rare cases that they amount to anything." "I hope." the lady returned, "that you are not worrying about our child in tills connection."?Chicago Recordllerald. The Stomach is the Man. A weak stomach weakens the man, because it cannot transform the food he eats into nourishment. Health and strength cannot be restored to any sick man or weak woman without lirst restoring health and strength to the stomach. A weak stomach cannot digest enough food to feed the tissues and revive the tired and run down limbs ami organs of the l>ody? Kodol Pyspepsro Cure cleanses, purifies, sweetens and strengthens the glands and membranes of the stomach, and [cures indigestion, dyspepsia and all stomach troubles. F. C. Duke. A Prejudiced Deduction. NVaggsby?So Do Wruyter says lie wrote ninety-ulne poems last year, docs he? Nnggsby?I understood him to say "better than a hundred." Waggshy?That's what I meant by ninety-nine. I've read his poems.?Bal titnore American. Retort. Ilusbnnd (irritably)?It isn't n year since you raid you believed our mar- j riage was made in heaven, and yet you ' order me around as if I wasn't anybody. Wife (calmly)?Order is heaven's first law.?New York Weekly. You will find that the mere resolve to be nseless and the honest desire to help other people will, in the quickest and most delicate ways, also improve yourself. A Rcitinrknblc Case. One of the most remarkable cases of a cold, deep-seated on the lungs, causing pneumonia, is that of Mrs. Gertrude E. Fentier, Marion, lnd., who was entirely eured by the use of One' Minute Cough Cure. She says: "The coughing and straining so weakened me that I run down in weight from 143 to 02 pounds. I tried a number of remedies to no avail until I used One Minute Cough Cure. Four booties of this wonderful remedy cured me entirely of the cough, | strengthened my lungs and restored me to my normal weight, health and strength." F. C. Duke. Spain'* Mlvmtory Sheep. There arc about 10,000,000 migratory shcoi> In Spain, which each year travel as much as 200 miles from the plains to the mountains. They are known as, transhumantos. aiul their march, resting places and behavior are governed by special regulations, dating from the fourteenth century. At certain time^ no one may travel the same route as the sheep, which have the right to graze on all open and common land 011 the way. For this purpose a road nlne< yards wide must be left on nil inclosed and private property. The shepherds lend their llocks, which follow after ami around. The llocks are accompanied by provision mules and by large dogs to guard against wolves. The merino sheep travel 400 miles to tlie mountains, and the total time spent on the migration there and back is fourteen weeks. What's in a Name? Everything is in the nauie when it comes 10 Witch Hazle Sulve. E. C. DeWittA Co., of Chicago, discovered some years ago, how to makeaealve ffom Witch Jla/.lo that is a specitie for 1'iles. For blind, bleeding, itching and protruding Files, eczema, j cuts, burns, bruises ami all skin diseases, DeNVitt's J?alve has 110 equal. This has given rise to numerous worthless counterfeits. Ask for beW'itt's?the genuine. F. C. Duke. I Bribery In KlectionN. | Rribory In elections is an ancient If j not an honorable custom. This Is shown j in the case of Shrewsbury. England. | An extract from Fairy's "Parliaments and Councils of England" of a case of j bribery, with its punishment, in 1571 , shows how long the pernicious custom j has been in practice: "Thomas Long, 'a | very s.nquo man mm unui' lo serve, is questioned how lie cauie to be elected, lie confesses that be {rave the mayor of West bury and another ?-4 for Ids place. 'J'bey arc ordered to repay this sum. and a line of ?^0 Is to be assessed on the corporation and Inhabitants of Westbury for their scandalous nttenipt." One can Imagine the indignation of tbo?e inhabitants of Shrewsbury who received no bribe having to pity a line for those who did. The I.ticky Man. A.?That's .lottos' daughter with him. She's Just about to be married. 11.?Who's the lucky man? ' . A.?Jones. The best pill 'neatb the stars and stripes; It cleanses the system' and never grij>es. Little Karlv Risers of worldly repute? Ask for DoWitt's and take no substitute. A small pill, easy'to buy, oasv to take and easy to act, but never failing in results. Do Witt's Little Early Risers arouse the secretions and act as a tonic. F. C. Duke. *^^DR. I. M, ^ DENT Grown and Bridge < Work a Specialty. inSlSB 1^1 jSBRatsttiR if? Josi TO-AlX^O ?? ?r. rrw r?^?????? ??? A BIASED SON OF ERIN. 11 In OriKinnl SiiKKi'itlon For UaInrsint; O'Salllvnn Cnncnilo. In l:is 'Ileeollcctions" Aubrey do Vero tells of an Irishman ho met In i Switzerland with whom patriotism was | su iruij ii mama iuih every wora ill ! praise of t lie scenery about him seemed I a distinct aspersion on the land of ids , Idrtli. "Wlint can you compare here," j lie demanded, "with the mountains of ) Wicklow?" "Perhaps," said a traveler, "one might name the mountains of the Mont Plane range." I "Oil," lie replied scornfully, "they're ; out of all reason! I am after walking along the Chamounl valley for three days and I saw only four of those mountains. Sure, in Wicklow I'd have counted as many as eight ot them in three hours." "Have you seen tl.ls wonderful waterfall within half a mile of usV" , "I have not seen ic, and I am not going to see It. Didn't I see the O'Sulll- , van cascade at KlUarpey? Down it , conies from such a height flint you , C 't know where it conies from. Down ' i tinges, thundering and bellowing, sometimes blyck as Ink and sometimes white as milk, dashing itself against the right hand rocks and smashing itself against the left hand ones. What is your Ilaiuleck fall compared to tliat?" "Some persons would say," was the reply, "that the waterfall here is about ten times as high and six times as broad." "Ah, then," said he, with an added note of scorn, "then the O'SulIIvan cascade is not big eno '.gh for you? And tell me this now: Couldn't you take n magnifying glass to it?" Stttlie'a Gneu. Teacher?Can any little girl tell me wlio was Columbus? Sadie (frantically snapping her On gersj? i kuow. Teacher? Well, Sadie? Sadie?Columbus, the gem of llie i>ccnu.? Philadelphia Press. Dr. R. M. Dorsey, Specialist on diseases of the EYE and EAR ?and? OPTICIAN. Successor to H. 1*. Goodtll. Alexander's Music Hull, Spartanburg, S. C. 47-lyr. Valuable Cotton Gin, Saw Mill. Etc., Outfit for Sale. Ry order of the Probate Court herein I offer f#r sale, at private ?a>, jf>r oasl*, the following personal nrofett;: O.ie Winship C-ttou P.e?>; tw <70S?w Cmiennia) C >t on Gits; two70S?w Centennial Cotton Giu Fetdert; two 70 S*\v Centennial Cn urn vim VvJioenser?; nnrl nece5sary , lixtitrra to a'I tV.e abovi; oue 40-horae i power Uoi'er; ore B iler and lginc; oue S iw M il ou' fit, iccluding two Circular tSaws, Beltin and other equipment*; oue (irirt Mill and outfi ; one Flour Mill and outtif; belonging o tl c esta'e of the late Willianu K. Ray. deceased. All or any of raid property is offered at privato sale, and | any one wit-hint; to purchase will com I rounirate wiln J. A. Sawyer, Attor- < ?ey, Uoion, S. C., who is authorized ' lo sell same. If aoy or all of said ' property is not s >'d at private aile hy [ Sal'kday in April, next, being the j tixib day of April, 1003. sach will be j sold ru add d?r at the '-Harris Miil" , in the town of Union, beginning at 1 i o'clock p. in., to the highest bidder, at public auction, for cash. Mrs. Carrie Bay, March 4, 1903. Administratrix. 10 5t 11AIR,^ I 1ST.. I Office Bank Building I Union. S. oH f I ! XtlUlUT Jjgj if I ITtf ANdf EORlTV ffijg I RN'POJTON OIt|cO. M Rdurws AND CEQRGCV Need not be brou#h* iatcrt-equiiitljQ by the lioiisdvyife ihiC irttrouizja The U-Need-A Steajj| Laundry. \ All Mc., are ttior- E nfu^li^ (iri'il "iH'tofe 'UeUijfl bundled for J" lelivery au<l cm be puMto immediate g use when icc-oved witbonOear of damp- 1 ueee We dmd rtifWeiRil' iauudetlng I and do all well. ? U-Need-a Steam Laundry. ' "' i n , In New Quarters : i". Having moved to my new stand, and got everything in shto shape, I am prepared to attend to yopr needs in the line of watches, jejvelry and repairing. Give me a caH.. F. G. Trefzsr, Williamson's Old Stand. 41BRICK! BRICK!' BRICKI!! For sale in arly nnnntitv The Rodger Brick Works. FOR SALECHEAP One 15 II. P. Poller and 'Engine (detached) one Prick Machiug, 2U,U00 daily capacity. The Rodger Brick Works. Executors, Administrators, Tru? tees and Guardians'. You are htreby notified ihat'you must make >our annu d return* to tola court. The law ifipiires you to make returns, each and every jear. If you fail to do> ?o you will forfeit >uur conouiKainti. Tfie law will be Mi icily enforced in litis partieu'ar. Jason M. (iuRftll, Jan. ?J. IDO.j. IV??ivu?? ?ln. ir? ? ftW. Life and Accident'Insurance. */, r The Aetna Life Insurance, writes policies not only for Life Indemnity,' l>ut til ho policies that protect you in jh-oj of accident or sickness. The nily Old Line Company in the UntaftdF states to do this, Rites are uky reasonable. This company is well <nown and comment is unnecessary. I am representing I he. above Comliny and will be pleased to oalj on ny one wishing insurance. Write ne at Carlisle, 8, O. * " * 10-tf W. F. 13ateh, Ageni^ aesmn 8ab?